Opera 11 was released just a few hours earlier today, and it comes with several notable features, a new interface, and many other improvements. Written using the Qt toolkit and taking advantage of its own Presto engine, the Opera browser has been around for years, and it comes with unique features, which make it a popular browser even among the free software users on the Linux platform, with a respectable third position after Firefox and Google Chrome.

Opera 11 first start

First, let’s see what this new release has to offer, so here’s the news in Opera 11:

improved address field – the address field now hides long links focusing instead of the main domain name, so you can spot fake websites which try to impersonate a different address; all web pages got a badge to the left to replace protocols like HTTP or HTTPS, also, there is a badge showing if Opera Turbo is turned on or off

In addition to these, Opera comes with already consecrated features, like the email client, the BitTorrent client, IRC client, download manager, extensions support, widgets support, configurable keyboard shortcuts, configurable interface, importing/exporting feed lists or bookmarks, sidebar panel for fast access to places like history, downloads or mail, powerful speed dial page, powerful tab management, fullscreen mode. And these are just a taste of what Opera has to offer. Opera incorporates so many services it makes it easy to use it on everything web based, from a BitTorrent client to an IRC client or even a small games platform via widgets. One approach I always liked about Opera is how it handles everything in a tab, making the interface easy to use and easing the navigation.

Opera BitTorrent client

Integrated IRC client

Private tab browsing

Opera Widgets with the Analog Clock and Biolab Disaster game activated

To conclude, this release really meets up expectations, introducing several useful features and continuing to polish this awesome web browser.

Installation packages are available for all the popular distributions out there, and Opera always provided good Linux installing support.